The sixteenth season of Saturday Night Live, an American sketch comedy series, originally aired in the United States on NBC between September 29, 1990, and May 18, 1991.
Cast
Extensive changes occurred before the start of the season. Nora Dunn and Jon Lovitz were both dropped from the show. Following her boycott of the episode hosted by Andrew Dice Clay the previous season, Dunn left the cast.[1][2][3]
Before the season began, Lovitz requested time off so he could film Mom and Dad Save the World, which would cause him to miss the first several episodes of the season. Michaels refused, because he did not view this to be fair to the other cast members. Lovitz subsequently quit.[4] However, he would make several cameo appearances throughout this season.[5]
With Dunn and Lovitz gone, Michaels was put in an unusual situation. Most of the cast had been on the show for five seasons. He did not want to be put in the spot of having to replace the entire cast all at once (and to avoid repeating Jean Doumanian's mistake—and his previous mistake in the case of the season 11 cast—of hiring a cast of new, inexperienced cast members with little to no comedic chemistry). Instead, he promoted writers Rob Schneider and David Spade to the cast and hired Chris Farley,[3]Chris Rock[3] and Julia Sweeney.[6] He later hired Tim Meadows[7] and Adam Sandler[8] to the cast midseason.
Starting with this season, the cast was divided into three groups. A middle group was created, and this new category would be introduced with the word "with," following the introduction of the repertory players.[9] The first cast members added to the new group were Farley and Rock, with Meadows and Sweeney added midseason.
This season would also be the final season for Dennis Miller,[10]Jan Hooks and A. Whitney Brown. Hooks left at the end of the season to join the show Designing Women,[11] and Brown left the show midseason to move on to other acting opportunities. Miller, who also departed at the end of the season, was at the time the longest running anchor of Weekend Update, having done the job for six full seasons, until Seth Meyers broke the record in season 38.[12] However, Miller still holds the record as the longest solo anchor of Weekend Update as Meyers was paired with Amy Poehler in his first three seasons on Weekend Update and Cecily Strong in his final season on the show.
Phil Hartman was also planning on leaving the show, but NBC convinced Hartman to stay on for a few more seasons by promising him his own comedy show,[13] which was later scrapped.[14] Hartman's third wife, Brynn, appears in this season's opening credits montage as the woman whom Hartman is speaking with in a restaurant booth.
This was also the final season for longtime writer A. Whitney Brown (who had been a writer since 1985, as he left the writing staff after six years. [18]
Edie Brickell & New Bohemians performs "Woyaho" and "He Said".[19]
Elliott Gould, Steve Martin and Paul Simon make cameo appearances as members of the "Five Timer's Club"; Jon Lovitz cameos as a waiter, Conan O'Brien as a doorman and Ralph Nader appears as a onetime former host trying to get into the club.[24] Ralph Nader also appears in the "Global Warming Christmas Special" sketch.
Tony Randall makes a cameo appearance in the "Game Beaters/Mr. Short Term Memory" sketch.
Future cast member Adam Sandler appears in the Sabra sketch.
Contains the first "Richmeister"[26] sketch, the debut of "Deep Thoughts by Jack Handey", the first "Coffee Talk" sketch as well as the "Sinatra Group" sketch.